Please Do Your Debauchery After You Die - Chapter 261
**Chapter 261: The Great Architecture Era**
**January 30, Monday.**
Purge Day was successful, and the stocks continue to rise.
The consultation content on Sunday brought me a sincere image, revealing a new side of myself, which garnered some praise!
My broadcast is also cruising smoothly today.
And I wasn’t the only one making progress.
With the new year, Miho, who took over the operation of the official YouTube channel, successfully uploaded the first video titled “Greetings from V-Live,” which has garnered a decent view count of 10,000 a week later.
“Running a YouTube channel seems like a loss in the short term, but I can’t just let it be.”
If live streaming is a stable salary, YouTube could be compared to a weekly lottery ticket.
It feels like I’m constantly losing money, but one day it could pay off with a big win.
And occasionally winning 4th or 5th prizes can surprisingly help with cost preservation.
What does this mean?
Among the few viewers who come through the YouTube channel, there could be a “big spender” if luck is on our side.
I actually saw cases like that before I returned.
Among the d*e-hard fans of Park Nana, who was famous for her early Candy power as a virtual streamer on Pangea TV, there were quite a few who became fans through YouTube videos.
Moreover, YouTube is a source of pride for streamers.
Honestly, the societal perception of being a streamer is still not great.
There’s a lingering feeling that it belongs to an underground culture.
On the other hand, YouTube is seen as a much more mainstream culture.
It’s a service used by an enormous population around the world.
In reality, the work isn’t that different, but in the minds of the public, streamers on streaming platforms are viewed like small-time players, while YouTubers are seen as corporate employees.
Of course, this perception probably applies to YouTubers with a certain subscriber count.
“Lucy is doing well too.”
Just as I entrusted Miho with the YouTube official channel, I delegated the management of our V-Live’s Naver fan cafe to Lucy.
Of course, all members have management rights and keep an eye on their respective boards, but we needed someone to handle the overall aspects.
For example, when there’s a specific event, creating a related board and deleting it afterwards, or storing the materials separately…
The minor cafe tasks are handled by the cafe managers, but someone who primarily communicates with them to give orders is essential.
The manager is only an assistant!
The final decision-making authority must lie with our members.
And as expected from Lucy’s meticulous personality, she has been running the cafe without any mistakes.
“Our cafe’s membership has already exceeded 3,000.”
We haven’t yet caught up with the peak membership of the Decrescendo cafe, but we still have the possibility of a future.
It’s like seeing Mayo, who is still a minor.
If she grows a little more, she will surely fulfill her role as an adult.
Our crew may also be lacking like Mayo, but they will definitely grow beautifully.
“Uh? Mayo suddenly has an itchy ear. Someone must be speaking ill of Mayo. The culprit is among us!”
That’s why the observant Mayo…
***
Recently, the talk of Lena World has been centered on just two things.
The newly introduced mythical-grade equipment and the landmark construction funding of each company.
This morning, Limiani represented MuYang Group and challenged the Goldenlight sword!
Surprisingly, she succeeded on her 4th try, earning the praise of having the “Hand of God.”
Wait, 4 tries? Is this for real?
When Tunyang drew the Witherlight sword, it cost over 60 million Lena, so seeing Limiani holding the Goldenlight sword for just a little over 10 million Lena made one think of the phrase “luck-based trash game.”
As this fact spread widely, personal investors who had been terrified of the exorbitant costs began to actively participate.
They would give up a portion of their earnings to the company, but everyone had a little bit of personal money, and the title of streamer with mythical-grade equipment was something they were coveting.
However, odds tend to converge toward the average.
Those who had casually challenged with 10 million or 20 million Lena were left with shattered hopes, holding Netherlight ingots infused with “unknown energies.”
Luck doesn’t come easily.
“Guwaah! Is there anyone willing to give me a coin fragment U? Guwaah!”
“My child is starving at home! Please, I beg you for just one coin fragment C.”
“…….”
Seeing the homeless, who come to the Beginning Village every time, begging for lucky coin fragments after losing their entire fortunes, an unsettling anxiety crosses my mind.
Thinking back, my own luck in gacha games is abysmal; surely it wouldn’t be the same when we try to draw for mythical-grade equipment, right?
If we hit the ceiling while watching other companies succeed on just a few tries next to us, I felt my mental state would break immediately.
If one can withstand such a situation, that’s true resilience.
“Honestly, while 10 million Lena might not seem like much, it takes at least three days of hardcore mining to earn that amount. If you think about how that would vanish in an instant….”
Moreover, hitting the ceiling would almost cost around 100 million Lena.
While viewers might chuckle along, the streamers who earned the money would feel their hearts drop every time a failure message popped up.
“Please, Judakshin! You made me like this, so take responsibility for at least my luck.”
If I draw the ceiling for mythical-grade equipment a couple of times, we would certainly fall behind given the current capacity of our company.
This is a realm of “luck,” and frankly, as a returned person, I have no way to change that.
I have no choice but to call upon even Judakshin, whom I usually wouldn’t ask for help…
“Hmm? Thinking about this, turning it into a competition between companies could make for some interesting content. Alright, let me jot down the idea.”
Imagine the leaders of each company coming out in order to attempt drawing mythical-grade equipment.
How thrilling and heart-pounding it would be.
Probably, from the viewer’s perspective, such a dopamine-inducing content would be hard to find.
“By the way, is it almost MuYang Group’s turn?”
Having wrapped up a light warm-up with 430,000 Diamond CK funding, MuYang Group.
After recent meetings, it was decided they would construct Munasthiris, a parody of Minas Tirith from “The Lord of the Rings.”
The timing for the construction funding challenge, as determined in the meeting, is late evening on January 31.
This is a sharp strategic choice.
There’s a saying in the streaming community to target the “beginning of the month.”
When a new month begins, people tend to feel psychologically that they haven’t spent money yet, leading to a tendency to open their wallets easily; in fact, checking the Candy Calculator site reveals significant data indicating that candy sponsorships increase at the beginning of the month.
Moreover, choosing 10 PM as the time was brilliant.
Pangea TV limits daily candy deposits to 10,000, so in just two hours, when the date changes, the limit resets.
This was a terrifying strategy to squeeze fans’ wallets twice.
Before my return, Akatsuki used this method to receive 1.12 million with just six members, proving its effectiveness.
“Since most of the fanbase of Akatsuki back then was fluid, the effect was greater. Once a hit is made, fan wallets can suffer greatly from aftereffects. With the fluid audience, they have a higher chance of leaving anyway, so it’s beneficial to squeeze them when we can.”
Of course, this is fundamentally a numbers game.
If that kind of squeezing gets too harsh, inevitably there will be backlash.
In fact, even when there were suggestions from viewers during our Sky Island construction funding, I didn’t want to use such tactics considering our image.
I believed that maintaining a good image is a better long-term strategy.
“Since we’re not going live for just a year or two, we need to think long-term. Investing in YouTube is with that in mind too.”
If I had the budget, I would want to run a personal YouTube channel, but that’s still a stretch.
Currently, all my money is tied up in stocks from Pangea TV.
By the second week of February, once I sort out the stocks, I should have a little surplus.
“Anyway, can MuYang Group achieve 1.4 million candies this time?”
It’s true that we, the irregular members of V-Live Company, recorded 750,000 in funding, which absorbed some candies from the fluid audience and Mr. Mu-jeossi.
But whether that has any impact remains unknown.
It could decrease compared to before, or conversely, the fans of MuYang Group, stimulated by our achievement of raising 750,000 as a seven-member company without large company streamers, might unite and surpass pre-return funding amounts.
“That’s something no one knows until you reveal the cards.”
In any case, the core of what I want to express is clear.
MuYang Group will fire the starting signal for the great landmark construction funding.
Of course, we took the lead first, but it simply cannot compare with the impact of MuYang Group.
Thus, this construction funding for Munasthiris will generate tremendous buzz, and other companies will inevitably pay attention.
What will happen then?
Naturally, other companies will also jump into landmark construction funding.
This isn’t just talk; the influence of the Munasthiris funding was so great that a similar construction funding wave occurred in Suna Land, surpassing servers.
“This is how it begins. The great architecture era of Lena World.”
We must be ready to embrace this new era.